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Getting an education in the current market

By
Real Estate Agent with Real Estate One

From the Jack's Winning Words Blog come this little gem - "There's no education like adversity." (Disraeli). Well, if Disraeli were a Realtor today he'd have earned a PhD by now. From the sames source, Bill Gates, the Microsoft founder, put it a different way - "Success is a lousy teacher. It makes smart people think that they can't lose."

I guess Realtors are all getting a free education in the current market. Just think of all of the things that we've all learned about foreclosures and short sales; things that most of us probably thought we just didn't need to know before this market downturn. And how many of us regularly dealt with HUD sales or even FHA and VA sales before the current crisis? How well-versed were we on Sheriff's Sales and redemption periods or on helping to write hardship letters to lenders? How many of us had ever negotiated with a second mortgage holder to accept a partial payment on a short sale? Were we equipped to advise clients on buying houses that had been stripped or damaged by vandals or used as crack houses? Did we know how to look for the signs of real estate fraud and other sleazy practices?

I suspect that the answers to most of the questions above would be that we didn't really have to know about any of those things before the current real estate crisis and recession hit. We were likely all fat, dumb and happy with success in the "normal" real estate market. Now, like a character out of some Charles Dickens novel, we've been thrust out on the street to fend for ourselves in a strange world full of empty, foreclosed houses, shady operators and new organizations and new rules, which many times are made up by each individual lender.

While most of us have found ways to cope with the new world of real estate, many have found it to be too confusing and too complex and have exited the business. New agents, who have never experienced a normal, balanced market in a normal, non-recessionary market, are learning the business under a worst-case scenario, but will likely be better equipped than most old-times to role with future market changes - assuming that they stay in the business that long. I only hope that they don't see the temporary success of some of the sleazy operators on the fringe of the business as role models for their careers.

It's hard sometimes to explain to the new people how things should be done (or would be done) in more normal real estate deals. This is, after all, the "new normal" that we are living through right now. There's another old saying that probably applies to our current environment - "What doesn't kill you makes you stronger." Those who survive the "Great Recession" will be some of the smartest and

Posted by

 

 Norm Werner

Real Estate One

 

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Norm Werner 2009-2011 All rights reserved

Dianne Hicks
Realty ONE Group - Poway, CA

You are so right, I've seen some things that I would have preferred not to see but have also learned so much. I have seen this industry take its toll on so many, both home owners and Realtors. I have seen the highs and lows of people. Great joy coming from new home owners, heartbreak from those who have lost their homes, some relieved for a new beginning, marriages dissolved, Realtors break down from the stress. Warm hearts and Cold hearts, kinda resembling the movie It's a Wonderful Life. In all of this, out comes the character of a human being that really shines and you see what someone is truly made of. Not just lessons in Real estate, but also lessons in life and true human interaction.

Oct 28, 2009 12:32 AM
Charles Stallions Real Estate Services
Charles Stallions Real Estate Services Inc - Gulf Breeze, FL
Buyers Agent 800-309-3414 Pace and Gulf Breeze,Fl.

I have found that you just have to adjust to the market. If luxury homes are work em, if it is foreclosures then work em. I am luck to be a buyers agent for a broker that can tell when the market is about to change. For an example when 04 came we transitioned out of first time buyers and went into luxury homes. What a change that was, but the market really boomed and although first timers were still buying, we made so much money off the luxury homes, selling half a million dollar homes to move up buyers ( although they couldn't afford it).

Our broker even drop all our pay down 10% and no bonuses but he promised we would make more money than the previous two years combined and he was right. But when the market when sour he gave of every bit of that money back in bonuses, he called it a forced savings and all five of us are glad he did, because even with the bad times that put us over the amount we made the previous year.

Oct 29, 2009 11:45 PM